So many different angles to look at here, with regard to word counts and what pubs. want, etc. The most consistent guideline I hear at conferences is a pb can't be longer than 1,000 words, but the easiest to sell are those under 500.
Now, as a teacher, this really bothers me. Some of my favorite pbs that I like to use in my classroom are longer than 1,000 words, and not because the author was too wordy or too talky. (BTW, most of these were published more than a decade ago...) I'm thinking Owl Moon, by Jane Yolen, for example. (Not totally sure what the word count is, but I can picture the amount of text on a page, and it SEEMs longer than 1,000 to me). These stories have some meat in them - not just bones. I love these stories, and use them as models when we do author studies and writers' workshop. I understand that parents are pressed for time, because I'm one of those parents. But I wish that word count wasn't such a defining factor for pub. houses these days. Some of the world's best authors write pbs that have higher word counts: Frank Asch, Eve Bunting (not all, but some of her work), Jane Yolen, Patricia Polacco, Cynthia Rylant, Jan Brett, Dav Pilkey...I suppose if you're one of these authors, word counts don't matter all that much in the eyes of a publisher. Perhaps the lower word count push is due less to what parents want, and more to the fact that publishers know that newbie authors tend to make the mistake of being too wordy?
buglady